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To: kmooney@stlawu.edu
Subject: Carnegie Perspectives: A different way to think about ... quantitative literacy
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Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2007 01:59:22 -0700
From: "carnegiepresident@carnegiefoundation.org" <carnegiepresident@carnegiefoundation.org>
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                                <h2>A different way to think about ... quantitative                 
 literacy</h2>
                                <p class="announcetext"><em>Figures don't lie, but liars
figure.</em> &ndash;Mark                   Twain<br />
                                <em><br />
                                There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and
statistics.</em> &ndash;Mark                 Twain, attributed by him to Benjamin Disraeli</p>
                                <p><br />
                                Michael Burke teaches mathematics at the College of San Mateo       
           and is a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Foundation. He is                   working on
a book, drawn from his own integrative approaches                   to teaching, that advocates
teaching students to use mathematics                   in ways that prepare them for active lives as
citizens in a                   democracy.</p>
                                <p>He encourages the integration of mathematics, statistics         
         and their manifold forms of representation with other undergraduate                  
courses. In this manner, he helps students understand,                   critique and write about
serious issues that range from global                   warming to world population growth, all of
which require the                   proper interpretation and use of quantitative data in a variety 
                 of forms.</p>
                                <p>Mike Burke issues a challenge to his fellow                   
educators&mdash;both those who teach mathematics and those                   who teach the other
disciplines&mdash;to emerge from their                   monastic disciplinary cells and address the
challenges of quantitative                   literacy. I am persuaded by his argument. I dream      
            of a time when those liars who figure can less easily pull                   the wool
over our collective eyes.</p>
                                <div>
                                <div>Carnegie has created a forum&mdash;Carnegie
Conversations&mdash;where                   you can engage publicly with the author and read and
respond                   to what others have to say about this article at <a
href="http://news.carnegiefoundation.org/perspectives/lt/t_go.php?i=16&e=MTQxMzI=&l=-http--www.carnegiefoundation.org/perspectives/october2007">http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/perspectives/october2007</a>.</div>
                                </div>
                                <p>Or you may respond to Mike privately through <a
href="mailto:carnegiepresident@carnegiefoundation.org"
target="_blank">carnegiepresident@carnegiefoundation.org</a>.</p>
                                <p>We look forward to hearing from you.</p>
                                <p>Sincerely,<br />
                                <img width="150" height="50"
src="http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/files/enewsletters/perspectives/assets/LeeShulman.gif" alt=""
/><br />
                                Lee S. Shulman<br />
                                President<br />
                                The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching </p>
                                <p
align="center">.....................................................................................................</p>
                                <h2>  <br />
                                A Mathematician's Proposal</h2>
                                <p>By Michael                 C. Burke</p>
                                <p>In <em>Mathematics and Democracy, </em>Lynn Arthur Steen
describes                   quantitative literacy as &quot;a habit of mind, an approach             
     to problems that employs and enhances both statistics and mathematics.&quot; What              
    characterizes this habit of mind, this way of thinking? Why                 is it important? How
can it be taught? </p>
                                <p>These are questions                   much on my mind as a
college mathematics teacher, but I believe they matter far beyond my discipline. Quantitative
literacy, the ability to discriminate between good and bad data, the disposition to use quantitative
information to think through complex problems&mdash;these are capacities that educators across
fields should be helping students develop. I'd like to lead you to this conclusion through an
extended example.</p>
                                <p>Princeton University economics professor Paul Krugman recently   
               began a blog on  <em>The New York Times</em> website. In                   his <a
href="http://news.carnegiefoundation.org/perspectives/lt/t_go.php?i=16&e=MTQxMzI=&l=-http--krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/09/18/">first
                  post</a>, Krugman wrote, &quot;I'll be using this space                   to
present the kind of information I can't provide on the printed                  
page&mdash;especially charts and tables, which                   are crucial <strong>to the way I
think</strong> about most of the issues                   I write about.&quot; Krugman then
introduces a graph that presents                   a picture of income distribution in the country
by displaying                   the share of total income earned by the richest 10 percent          
        of Americans. </p>
                                <p align="center"><img width="533" height="288" alt="Krugman chart
from NY Times"
src="http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/files/enewsletters/perspectives/assets/19krugman2.533.jpg"
/><br />
                                <span class="byline">Income distribution chart courtesy             
     of Paul Krugman</span></p>
                                <p><br />
                                On the basis of this graph, Krugman                   posits that
the &quot;middle class America&quot; period from 1950 to                   1970 produced a society
&quot;without extremes of wealth or poverty,                   a society of broadly shared
prosperity,&quot; and that this period                   is, in fact, an aberration. The years since
1970, as Krugman's                   graph clearly shows, have been marked by a gradual return to   
               the America that existed before what he calls The Great Compression                  
in the World War II years, an earlier America characterized                   as the Gilded Age.</p>
                                <p>How did this shift occur? How did this country decide            
      to return to a Gilded Age in which extremes of wealth and poverty                   were the
norm? The answer, of course, is that we made                   no such conscious decision. Instead,
we made numerous                   small decisions, without any articulated vision or plan. We      
            did not see what we were doing, and could not therefore really                  
&quot;decide,&quot; because <em>we                   did not know how to look.</em> There was public
discussion,                   certainly, but it was fragmented, fractious, and marked by            
      a conspicuous lack of grounding in the underlying reality of                   the America of
the late twentieth century and the trends at                   work that led to the America of
today.</p>
                                <p>In contrast, Krugman's use of a graph illustrates an             
     especially powerful way to look at and think about our world.                   The graph, he
says, is &quot;central to how I think about the                   big picture, the underlying story
of what is really going on                   in this country.&quot; Using the tools of economics, he
                  shows us that things that are otherwise difficult to see or                  
understand can sometimes become dramatically apparent when                   we look at the right
graph, table or chart. These visual                   representations of data are indispensable
tools for understanding,                   and they can often clarify what is obscured by the sound
and                   fury of public debate.</p>
                                <p>Caveats are in order here, of course. Krugman uses the
&quot;right                   graph,&quot; but it is also possible to construct the &quot;wrong     
             graph.&quot; Graphs, like words, can be used to mislead. There                   is
also a great deal of subtlety involved. As Edward                   Tufte  elegantly illustrated in
<em>The Visual Display of                   Quantitative Information</em>, it can be difficult to
envision                   what the right graph for a given situation should look like.             
     Which graph will illuminate rather than obscure, clarify rather                   than
confuse?</p>
                                <p>But my larger point here is that the content of our thoughts     
             and the depth of our understanding are dependent on the tools                   we
bring to the task. <em>What</em> we think                   is intertwined with <em>how</em> we
think. And                   the ability to think in terms of quantitative data, in terms           
       of tables and graphs, is indispensable for understanding our                   modern world.
This should be part of what we teach <em>all</em> our                   students&mdash;not just
students in selected courses or selected                   majors.</p>
                                <p>With that aim in mind, I would propose that we begin by
redesigning                   our freshman and sophomore writing programs in order to place         
         a significant emphasis on working with quantitative data, and                   on the
visual representation of that data. We write,                   after all, to figure out what we
think. And we ask our                   students to write so that they will learn how to think.</p>
                                <p>I can imagine that many who oversee our writing programs would   
               not be eager to implement such a program. After all,                   it is perhaps
asking them to teach our students to think in                   ways that they themselves do not
think. That's                   a tall order, indeed. Of course, the responsibility for             
     rethinking the way we teach writing on our campuses should                   be shared.
Mathematics faculty, in particular, should                   take the lead here, but others who view
the world through a                   quantitative lens&mdash;statisticians, economists, physicists,
biologists,                   even some psychologists&mdash;should contribute as well. It           
       is well past time for those of us with a quantitative cast                   of mind to
become involved in a serious way with the writing                   programs on campus. For the
majority of our students,                   this is where the action is, and accordingly, this
should be                   one of the places where we concentrate our efforts.</p>
                                <p>We need to come to terms with some basic questions. Since        
          the ability to think quantitatively is, in fact, essential                   to
understanding today's world and to acting effectively                   and wisely as a citizen, we
have an obligation to ask: are                   we teaching these skills? Do we routinely require
students                   to build their arguments on an analysis of the data relevant             
     to an issue? Do we require them to create their own tables                   and graphs to
support their arguments? Are we teaching                   our students how to get beyond the
rhetoric surrounding important                   issues, how to see the underlying trends at work,
and how to                   cut through the distractions of the often loud, heated debate?</p>
                                <p>If the answer to these questions is no, then we have work        
          to do.</p>
                                <div>&nbsp;</div>
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                                <p>We invite you to respond                   to the author of this
piece through <br />
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href="https://mail.google.com/mail?view=cm&tf=0&to=carnegiepresident@carnegiefoundation.org"
target="_blank">carnegiepresident@carnegiefoundation.org</a> or                   you can join a
public discussion at <a
href="http://news.carnegiefoundation.org/perspectives/lt/t_go.php?i=16&e=MTQxMzI=&l=-http--www.carnegiefoundation.org/conversations/">Carnegie
                  Conversations</a>.</p>
                                <p>For permission to reprint or redistribute or for a text-only     
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href="https://mail.google.com/mail?view=cm&tf=0&to=crawford@carnegiefoundation.org"
target="_blank">crawford@carnegiefoundation.org</a>.</p>
                                <p>To read all the Carnegie Perspectives, visit<br />
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href="http://news.carnegiefoundation.org/perspectives/lt/t_go.php?i=16&e=MTQxMzI=&l=-http--www.carnegiefoundation.org/perspectives/">http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/perspectives</a>.</p>
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